What will be left

“It shouldn’t work. It shouldn’t be magic. You shouldn’t weep happy and then sad and then happy again. But you do. And I do. And we all do.”  – Ray Bradbury, The Cat’s Pajamas

liftoff

In less than two weeks we will buckle up, roll down the driveway, wait for a break in traffic, and turn left. We’ll drive north past salt marsh and pinelands, through perfect flat farmland, and then across the Delaware Memorial Bridge, before turning south again for another trip to Western North Carolina – this time, to stay.

It’s a decision we made months ago, but it’s been hard to write about it because it is really quite raw. It’s tangled up in all kinds of feelings about education and community and vocation and gratitude and plenty. Teasing that knot apart and then reworking it into a smooth rope of story has felt, quite frankly, beyond my abilities. There are also many details that remain unsettled. When I thought about sharing our news while so many of the bones were missing, I felt really vulnerable.

But it’s been hard not to write about it. As a child I imagined adulthood to be rife with clarity and wisdom, and I thought that meant grownups made decisions with ease and grace – but my actual experience has been that decisions wring more from me the older I get. You don’t get to try for the thing you’re aching for without losing something else that was hard-won. We are choosing a magical school community for our kids and losing our community here because of it, and I’m in the thick of that loss right now. Writing about it earlier might have helped.

I’m sad because I want my children to be from somewhere. I don’t know that I would have said the same thing fifteen years ago, when I was 25 and living in New York City and just beginning to imagine what parenthood might look like. I pictured it within the context of the life I was living then, a life that might have moved me to Mexico or Switzerland or Burkina Faso. It wasn’t crazy to imagine doing this with kids, because it was the real story many of my dear friends and coworkers were living. But as it turned out, it wasn’t my story. The person I wanted to build a life with was a farmer, and as a rule, farmers need to stay in one place. Plants need irrigating and weeding and bean beetle squashing. Chickens need water too, and they need to eat every day, and the time to figure out what’s eating six of them a night is right now, not when you get back from a work trip.  You have to pick and prep for four farmers markets a week, and a dozen CSA drops on two different days. You have to repair your irrigation pump, put new plastic on the greenhouse, call the tractor mechanic, pay your market fees, pay your payroll taxes, pay your crew, drain the hydrants when the nights fall below freezing. The goats are stuck in their fencing. Something is eating the dill. The third generation of tomatoes will get too leggy if you don’t transplant them in the next 48 hours. This list is not a burden, not a lamentation – if anything, it is a benediction. Say no to a life of motion, the list tenders, and you can say yes to feeding people, yes to learning over years what your soil and your climate can do, yes to falling into bed exhausted and proud, yes to being deliciously in charge of your days, yes to integrating your children wholly into those days.

It bears saying: I didn’t say yes right away. For a couple years I scuttled back to New York on visits as often as I could, straining to be both who I’d been and who I was becoming, seeing the decision as binary and hating that I had to choose. My years in New York had taught me a thousand things about community, about dignity, about belonging, about needing and being needed, but what did the tomatoes care about any of that? How did my take on extreme poverty help me learn to pick fast, to troubleshoot irrigation, to sell eggplant? I had to cram a lot of myself into a box and push it into the shadows, out of the way.

But time did its thing, and eventually that yes-list a couple paragraphs up, along with the birth of my first child, was enough to anchor me in my farm life. We bought twenty acres in Virginia and we thought we’d be there for decades, thought our kids would pick wild blackberries from the same brambles every summer, thought they’d learn our woods by heart, thought they’d keep their drawl. Life brought us north, though, to this narrow county between a vast expanse of bay and the Atlantic Ocean, and I thought so much, as I always do, about the opening sentences in Annie Dillard’s An American Childhood, when she writes that the topography of our childhood will inform our sense of home and self for the rest of our life:

When everything else has gone from my brain – the President’s name, the state capitals, the neighborhoods where I lived, and then my own name and what it was on earth I sought, and then at length the faces of my friends, and finally the faces of my family – when all this has dissolved, what will be left, I believe, is topology: the dreaming memory of land as it lay this way and that.

Those words throbbed in my chest for months after we arrived. Over and over I stood in the wind on the beach, hand on my swollen belly, toes kneading sand. I watched my son squeal and jump in the icy surf. I surveyed the wide, wide water, the canopy of sky, thinking: this is so beautiful, and so foreign.

But my son was still little and my daughter was still a couple months from her inaugural cry. It broke my heart to realize he wouldn’t remember our farm, but I came to understand, and relish, that the dunes and the mud flats and the wide creeks twining through the salt marsh would give to him what thick woods and rolling hills gave to me. He will know why the horseshoe crabs come, I thought. He will recognize milkweed and glossy ibis and whelk egg case. He will know how to walk at low tide without sinking in the mud. He will know how cold it has to get before the bay freezes. He will swim in tea-colored lakes among pines and white cedars. He will slap at greenheads, and cry as crabs pinch his toes, and hold luminescent comb jellies in his palm at dusk.

This landscape enveloped both my children for four and a half years – years so tender the details will surely fade.

But me? I’m 40, and this coastal plain that felt like a strange dreamscape in 2013 has become, unexpectedly but unequivocally, home. I came here on summer vacations as a child and teenager, and what I loved then was returning every few years to things I could count on, things that stayed the same: the crash of the surf, the flash of the lighthouse, the memorial plaques on the boardwalk benches, the shrieks of laughing gulls, the first lunch at the same sandwich shop every year. But now that I live here what I love is how it is never the same. The bay looks different to me every single time I’m there, depending on the tide and the light and the season. The laughing gulls, it turns out, are migratory summer birds, and they leave not so long after the tourists do. I wait for the ospreys and the oystercatchers and the diamondback terrapins and the horseshoe crabs and the monarchs to lay their eggs. When I drive the long stretch of highway on the west side of the county, the marsh spreads away from me in every direction and I feel cradled. I think: I could never love another landscape the way I love this one.

History tells me that’s false, tells me I keen so hard for home wherever I am that I get outside and pay attention and that this attention makes every place beloved. But its hard to see that forest of truth for the trees of my grief.

It’s not just this teeming wetland ecosystem we’re leaving, of course. Leaving Virginia was hard mostly because it meant letting go of the vision we had for our farm and family life there. Leaving the Hudson Valley was hard mostly because it meant letting go of a brief flash of possibility of selling our vegetables in the thriving markets of New York City. Leaving here is hard mostly because it means letting go of the most amazing community. There have been beautiful people in our life at every turn, don’t get me wrong. But until we came here, we didn’t have it all.

We have haunts, where the baristas and servers and deli managers and librarians know my kids by name and have inside jokes. We have sitters who love my kids like family. We have friends who squeeze around our table every Wednesday night, never complaining about the sink full of dishes or the missing toilet paper or the fact that we’re out of chairs and so they’re half-sitting on the play kitchen sink. Rare is the day when there’s not someone who can meet us at the beach or the playground or the library. When I have an emergency trip to the dentist I know who can take my kids. When I need to cry I know who will share a pot of coffee with me. We have all of this and I feel like we’ve only just begun and now we are walking away.

Last month my son spent a day visiting his new school. All of this change is big, and when I picked him up I could see that in his face right away, so we headed straight to an ice cream shop. And after that we drove just a little ways north, into a national forest. We pulled off to the side of the road and right there plunged a waterfall. We climbed down to the creek bank and then onto flat wet rocks, the spray an exploding rainbow in our hair and on our cheeks.

I was cautious in this new place. I worried: how slippery are these rocks? How deep is the water if we slip? Will he hit his head? But then two things happened, and my racing mind slowed almost to a freeze-frame. First, I saw that my son was sure-footed and happy. Second, I saw the falls: violent, mighty, wild. Anything but static. I thought of the beach, comforting in its sameness when I was a tourist, and for the very opposite reason now that it’s home.

I’m not home yet, I thought, but this wild water is going to be the thing that leads me there.

blue

17 thoughts on “What will be left

    1. Lisa Post author

      Thanks so much, Wes. I know it’s going to be really, really good, that a thousand good things await (you among them!!!). And I almost tried to write about that too. But I realize I need to walk through this stuff first.

      Reply
  1. Jess

    Read this with my coffee as I procrastinate on starting my work, and my mind and heart are suddenly full of the topographical memories of my childhood – fern fronds uncurling at the borders of pine needled carpets, the swell of green mountains wearing marshmallowy mist. I spent the weekend elbowing my way into open houses looking for a bigger place to raise my daughter. I’ve been focused on closet space and ceiling height and mortgage rates. Your absolutely stunning writing reminded me how our place will ossify a sense of home for her forever in ways unrelated to all the above. Wishing you a peaceful journey in leaving and arriving. xx

    Reply
  2. Beth Lehman

    oh, lisa… my sister texted me this morning to mention your writing here and how beautifully poignant it is. the way you write about the landscape – with tenderness and with attention – i know you will learn to love wherever it is you call home. i’ve found for myself that some of the things i wanted so much for my children – a sense of place and community – were born from a place of loss. not having these things in my own childhood heightened my sense of their importance. now that my children are in high school, i feel a bit differently – i can appreciate the benefits to the childhood i had and see that children can thrive in so many different ways and places as long as they are loved and supported. all the best as you navigate the many upcoming changes. may there be plenty of lovely surprises!

    Reply
  3. Chrisi

    I feel so removed from you now, but weirdly so because I once felt so comfortable and close to you. So I feel like I have no place here, but wanted to say I love you anyways.

    Reply
  4. nicole

    Aaah. Yes. I relate to this so much. Even though I haven’t loved every place I’ve lived it’s been home, for those brief years, where my babies came home and where they learned to walk. D and I talk a lot about do we want to go “home” to California so much because we want to feel settled after almost five years of living in four different countries? Or do we really want to be *there*? (But it’s both. We do so want to be there specifically.) Even leaving Riyadh, which let’s be honest, was a challenging place to live, was hard because of our friends, our routines, etc. Leaving here will be even more difficult because S loves her school and it’s just … really nice here. So I don’t know — why do we do this to ourselves?! I think even though it’s so heartbreaking and hard and etc. it also deepens us, helps us to appreciate the moment, and creates new challenges. It certainly keeps life interesting. Love to you!!!

    Reply
  5. Nichole

    “You don’t get to try for the thing you’re aching for without losing something else that was hard-won. ” Hi Lisa, My name is Nichole. I’ve followed you on IG for a long time and I sometimes peep into your blog if you mention it on IG. This post…cuts through my heart. It’s all the words I’ve wanted to say about home, about coming of age as a mother, finding a tribe, leaving that tribe, learning to love a new land, seeing your children absorb that new to you land as their own, and then leaving it all behind to attend to longings. My family did this last year. We moved from Texas to WNC. It broke my heart and saved my soul. And it was grueling and complicated, but in the end, it was the choice we needed to make. WNC has provided the softest of landings, but still, there are moments that I forget where I am or where ‘home’ is and most of the time, it’s one big, messy, heartfelt jumble. I feel so grateful to have loved so many places and so many people. Like the universe, the heart is so darn expansive. Best of luck and much love as you brave the new seas. <3

    Reply
  6. Debbie Weingarten

    Ohhh, Lisa. What big change. And I feel it, too, on a soul level. Sending love during this time of transition and movement and finding homes in different places.

    Reply
  7. Elizabeth Byrd

    This is beautiful.

    As a native North Carolinian, living in Raleigh, let me welcome you to our lovely State. We have much beauty, soul and love to share. Western NC is so special and a wonderful place to call ‘home’.

    If you find yourself in my area and need directions, farmers’ market advice, restaurants or park recommendations, feel free to touch base.

    Elizabeth

    Reply
  8. Katie Clary

    Thank you for sharing about your wayfinding. Being a grownup is definitely a terrain of gray, with unexpected valleys and peaks. I resonate so much with what you said about keening for home, enough that you get outside and fall in love with the flora and fauna all over again, in each place you live. I hope North Carolina brings your family community, joy, peace– and especially a sense of place.

    Reply
  9. Ashleigh Baker

    An early morning read through these words has tears spilling down my face. I feel every word of this in my bones right now. Thank you for finding words for the parts I don’t yet know how to speak aloud.

    Reply
  10. amanda

    I come here after not visiting in a while and see that you are imminently to arrive here in Western NC- no, you must already be here. Welcome, welcome. I loved reading your beautiful, vivid descriptions of place and heart here. I loved this maybe most of all, because it feels so familiar to me – “I keen so hard for home wherever I am that I get outside and pay attention and that this attention makes every place beloved.” It’d be great to cross paths with you someday~ I hope you are beginning to feel a bit settled in body and in mind in your new place.
    xo

    Reply
  11. Amy

    Lisa – Sitting for hours in an airport, I found this site in an old bookmark list I had. I’ve “known” you since Flickr days. Your writing is exquisite and I am reminded of that with your posts here. I know time is a luxury right now but I hope you are keeping a journal or an old box filled with notes. Your use of language is inspirational and an obvious gift. Hopefully things have settled into a rhythm and that your roots have taken hold where you are.

    Reply
    1. Lisa Post author

      Hi Amy, thank you, deeply, for your kind kind words. I’m sorry it took me a couple months to realize you’d left them. Working backwards, yes, a year and a half in, we’re mostly settled in here in North Carolina. I yearn to write more here, but work and kids and also some real uncertainty about how to use this space are stopping me. I do journal and also write shorter things on Instagram. Hoping I might carve out some time and space in 2020 to dust things off here too.

      Reply

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